This tough hike is one of those quintessential Las Vegas routes. A playground for the rich and famous, Las Vegas attracts many celebrities; some never make it home. In 1942, a plane carrying Carole Lombard (famous movie star and wife of Clark Gable) crashed high on the east face of Mt. Potosi. The site is now a footnote in history, visited occasionally by plane crash buffs, Carole Lombard fans, and tough Las Vegas hikers. Check out the new book Fireball by Robert Matzen.

The crash site has been picked over for decades, but much material remains, including small bits of human remains. Please respect the site and the memory of those who died here. For more photos of crash site debris, click here.

The traditional route to the crash site via Mt. Potosi Road is closed to private vehicles, but hikers may walk the road and drop into the crash site from above. However, hiking the the road is long, hot, and arduous, so do it during winter and bring more water than you think you'd need.

Direct hiking routes now start in Cottonwood Valley on the east side of Mt. Potosi. Cottonwood Valley Road, graded in the old days when land management agencies had money, now requires a high-clearance vehicle, and driving south over Cottonwood Pass nearly requires a 4WD vehicle. After leaving Cottonwood Valley Road, a 3.6-mile 4WD road leads west to the base of the steep east face of Mt. Potosi.

The lower slopes of Mt. Potosi burned in 2005, so much of the singleleaf pinyon pine forest is gone, but the shrubs are recovering.

Washes Route (view SW up the brushy wash)

Watch Out

Other than the standard warnings about hiking in the desert, ...this is a tough hike on a steep, rocky mountain, but other than falls and loose rocks, there are no unusual hazards and the route is only Class-2, althrough the cliffs are nearly 4th-class because of exposure in a couple of spots. Mt. Potosi was a mining district, and there are several mines along the access road, but remember: mines are never safe to enter. Some metal shards at the crash site have sharp, rusty edges.

While hiking, please respect the land and the other people out there, and try to Leave No Trace of your passage. This is a tough hike, so be sure to bring the 10 Essentials. Make sure this route of the appropriate difficulty for your skills. Cell phones work from some parts of the route.

Route through the cliffs (view SW)

Getting to the Trailhead

This hike is located on the east side of Mt. Potosi, about 1-1/2 hours southwest of Las Vegas.

Shortly beyond Ninetynine Mine, the USFS blocked the road with boulders (near Site 0869), so this is the new trailhead. Park here; this is the trailhead. [Note: despite my phone conversations with the USFS in 2011, there was no evidence of a barrier here in October 2012.]

Make no mistake -- the cliffs are steep!

From the trailhead, hikers can look up, above the limestone cliffs (southwest), and see the gully that holds the aircraft wreckage. To get there, the easier route runs up the canyon to the north (right) of the crash site, crosses southeast over a ridge, and then runs up the gully to the crash site. It is only 2.2 miles from the trailhead to the crash site, but it is a tough 2 miles -- don't let the distance fool you into thinking this is a "short" hike. Many people who try this hike don't make it through the cliffs.

Loose rocks and logs in the cliffs (view SE)

The Hike

From the trailhead (Table 2, Waypoint 01), the route continues up the closed road for about 200 yards to a T-intersection (Wpt. 02). From there, routes run out both roads. The Direct Route turns left, while the alternate Wash Route turns right. The routes are almost the same length, but the Direct Route seems a bit easier.

Hikers on very steep, loose slope (view northwest)

Direct Route: From the T-intersection (Wpt. 02), the old road runs up across the hillside. Around the corner, not visible from below, an old A-frame cabin sits beside the road. Passing the cabin, the old road stays in the wash.

Beyond the cabin, the old road gets narrow and steep as it winds among bushes and rocks to a fork (Wpt. 03). The Direct Route stays right (northwest) and drops steeply into a wash.

Crossing the wash, the old road climbs steeply, then runs west across relatively gentle terrain. The old road eventually intersects a major wash (Wpt. 04) that comes down the canyon to the left of the communications towers on the skyline. This route turns left into this over-grown wash and follows it upstream.

Crash site (view SW from saddle)

Wash Route: From the T-intersection (Wpt. 02), the alternative route turns right and runs northwest on the road. The road eventually runs into and follows a gravel wash up the canyon to a side wash (Wpt. 02A; 0.72 miles from the T). The route turns left and follows the brushy side-wash to the south. This is the canyon that comes down to the left (east) of communications towers on the ridgeline.

The two routes rejoin where the old road crosses the wash (Wpt. 04).

Impact site: cliff just above-left of hiker (view S)

Routes Converge: In the wash, the route runs up the canyon to near the limestone cliffs that cap the canyon (Wpt. 05). From the top of the canyon, the route runs up and left (facing the cliff) to a knob with dead trees (Wpt. 06). The route then climbs up and left into a steep scree chute. At the top of the scree slope, the route traverses left, then climbs another steep chute to a saddle above the cliffs (Wpt. 07).

It is better to hike up the canyon nearly as far as possible before cutting left into the cliffs. Cutting up too early, the route is blocked by cliffs. Staying high, there is an exposed, but only 2nd-class, route from the wash all the way to the ridgeline. There is a faint use-trail, but it is easier to follow on the way down.

The route reaches the ridgeline at a saddle (Wpt. 07) behind a knob. Out on the knob, there are nice views of the valley below and the crash site above.

Hillside at crash site is quite steep (view S)

From the saddle (Wpt. 07), the route crosses onto the south side of the ridge and continues uphill, staying near the crest of the ridge but avoiding the little crags along the ridgeline. When the bottom of the gully is close and the sidehill can be easily crossed, the route drops into the gully (Wpt. 08). At this point, wreckage begins to appear in the gully. If hikers drop into the gully too soon, they will be caught in a small box-canyon.

The route continues up the steep gully to the cliffs. The amount of wreckage increases towards the base of the cliffs, which was the impact site (Wpt. 09). Some debris were thrown above the cliff, but it is hard to determine whether what remains above the cliff resulted from the force of the impact or was carried up, but discarded, by exhausted hikers.

The largest pieces of wreckage include engine parts and landing gear, which are in the gully below the impact site. People already recovered the large aluminum parts (body and wings), so those are gone. However, thousands of small pieces of aluminum, lots of cabling, lots of fuel or hydraulic lines, bits of glass and ceramics, rubber hoses, and many other metallic parts litter the ground. People have been collecting the more interesting artifacts for decades, so what remains is too big to carry or not particularly interesting. There are also many interesting shell fossils in the rocks at the crash site.

Family members of the dead mounted a bronze plaque on the cliff just left of the impact site to memorialize the event, but it was placed illegally and has been removed. Whether removed officially or by vandalism, I suspect it might come back someday (still missing in Fall, 2012)

Small bits of human remains remain at the crash site. Please respect those who died and rebury any remains found on the surface.

Return to the trailhead by following your footprints back down the mountain to the trailhead.